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"Apparently the lady cut and sewn her own dresses too" Painting

Nadia Jaber

Spain

Painting, Oil on Canvas

Size: 59.8 W x 79.5 H x 1.6 D in

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247 Views
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Artist Recognition

link - Featured in the Catalog

Featured in the Catalog

link - Showed at the The Other Art Fair

Showed at the The Other Art Fair

link - Artist featured in a collection

Artist featured in a collection

About The Artwork

Continuing with my pictorial technique based on the mixture of styles and digital appropriation, in this series I go a step further by incorporating fragments from Old Master's paintings that have been reproduced in social networks, mostly without alluding to the author, title, technique, or time to which they belong. The online social equivalent to Duchamp's readymade art or object trouvé. The canvases are presented in the form of duets or triplets, where the second or third small canvas extends the caption and content of one of the compositional elements that are part of the main canvas. The title of the series "Swipe For The Details", serves to highlight the fragmented nature of the visual details featured online. The artworks are named after one selected comment from the original post from which the fragmented Old Master's painting has been reproduced, thus winking at the everyday larger social character of the current dimension of art. Painting multi-paneled composed of 3 canvases, framed courtesy and made by the artist (please note it can present some irregularities as it is handmade). Signed at the back of the painting and delivered ready to hang. Main canvas: 143,5 x 114 x 4 cm / 56.5 x 44.8 x 1.6 inches Top canvas: 59 x 43,5 x 4 cm / 23 x 17 x 1.6 inches Righ side canvas: 53 x 38 x 4 cm / 20.8 x 15 x 1.6 inches

Details & Dimensions

Multi-paneled Painting:Oil on Canvas

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:59.8 W x 79.5 H x 1.6 D in

Number of Panels:2

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Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

Artist Nadia Jaber (Spanish, b. 1986) channels the artist as a postdigital algorithm, an online magpie curating a found line, shape, and color to generate an analog version of the digital stream of information. Nadia’s work reflects not just on our visual ADHD but on what the mysterious machines behind social media are making us want, or think we want, and what that means for art appreciation. Her work has been featured in “15 Emerging Female Artists To Invest in Before They Blow Up” selected by Saatchi Art Head Curator Rebecca Wilson, and her paintings have been included in interior design projects featured in AD Spain Magazine. She has participated in the Other Art Fair by Saatchi Art in NY and had a solo show in LA. Also had participated in Art Fairs in Madrid and Mallorca. Nadia Jaber’s paintings jump around, scrolling between textures, flipping tabs into new color palettes and stretching materiality. She riffs between styles and ideas, cutting and scratching them like a DJ would, to curate something entirely new. The eyes and mind can keep up of course, because we’re used to this hyperactive image intake - we do it all day, every day on our phones. Nadia’s work is a full-scale rebellion against the smoke and mirrors of social media, the ultimate collage of the current algorithmic syncretism and acknowledges not only Nadia’s belonging to the digital art revolution, but points rather gratefully to Art’s ultimate dimension, its digital kingdom, where artists thrive, collect, exchange, buy, sell, and perhaps, more definitely, find inspiration and half live. Nobody with their wits about them would question that the art world is increasingly virtual and that its health hasn’t been better in decades. So the question here prays: are technologies to blame or to praise? Andy Warhol, one of the most accomplished ambassadors of appropriation, was ecstatic after discovering the wonders of silk-screening. In one of the fewest interviews available online —omnipotent technology in full bloom— Warhol told to Art News’s reporter Gene Swenson a rather legendary line: «I think everybody should be a machine. I think everybody should like everybody». It was 1962. Warhol anticipated not only the behavior of today’s technologies but the ultimate lust of artists like Nadia, who are openly challenging themselves to become precisely that same technology.

Artist Recognition

Featured in the Catalog

Featured in Saatchi Art's printed catalog, sent to thousands of art collectors

Showed at the The Other Art Fair

Handpicked to show at The Other Art Fair presented by Saatchi Art in Brooklyn, Brooklyn, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, Los Angeles

Artist featured in a collection

Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection

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